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nfidence in the reports of their great plenty became considerably diminished。 Still the walk was very refreshing after our confinement on board; and although the thermometer was below freezing; the cold only made the exercise more pleasant。 A little to the northward I observed; lying on the sea…shore; innumerable logs of driftwood。 This wood is floated all the way from America by the Gulf Stream; and as I walked from one huge bole to another; I could not help wondering in what primeval forest each had grown; what chance had originally cast them on the waters; and piloted them to this desert shore。 Mingled with this fringe of unhewn timber that lined the beach lay waifs and strays of a more sinister kind; pieces of broken spars; an oar; a boat's flagstaff; and a few shattered fragments of some long…lost vessel's planking。 Here and there; too; we would come upon skulls of walrus; ribs and shoulder…blades of bears; brought possibly by the ice in winter。 Turning again from the sea; we resumed our search for deer; but two or three hours' more very stiff walking produced no better luck。 Suddenly a cry from Fitz; who had wandered a little to the right; brought us helter…skelter to the spot where was standing。 But it was not a stag he had called us to come and look upon。 Half imbedded in the black moss at his feet; there lay a grey deal coffin falling almost to pieces with age; the lid was goneblown off probably by the windand within were stretched the bleaching bones of a human skeleton。 A rude cross at the head of the grave still stood partially upright; and a half obliterated Dutch inscription preserved a record of the dead man's name and age。
。。。。。VANDER SCHELLING。。。。 COMMAN。。。。JACOB MOOR。。。。 OB 2 JUNE 1758 AET 44。
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It was evidently some poor whaler of the last century to whom his companions had given the only burial possible in this frost…hardened earth; which even the summer sun has no force to penetrate beyond a couple of inches; and which will not afford to man the shallowest grave。 A bleak resting…place for that hundred years' slumber; I thought; as I gazed on the dead mariner's remains!
〃I was snowed over with snow; And beaten with rains; And drenched with the dews; Dead have I long been;〃
murmured the Vala to Odin in Nifelheim;and whispers of a similar import seemed to rise up from the lidless coffin before us。 It was no brother mortal that lay at our feet; softly folded in the embraces of 〃Mother Earth;〃 but a poor scarecrow; gibbeted for ages on this bare rock; like a dead Prometheus; the vulture; frost; gnawing for ever on his bleaching relics; and yet eternally preserving them!
On another part of the coast we found two other corpses yet more scantily sepulchred; without so much as a cross to mark their resting…place。 Even in the palmy days of the whale…fisheries; it was the practice of the Dutch and English sailors to leave the wooden coffins in which they had placed their comrades' remains; exposed upon the shore; and I have been told by an eye…witness; that in Magdalena Bay there are to be seen; even to this day; the bodies of men who died upwards of 250 years ago; in such complete preservation that; when you pour hot water on the icy coating which encases them; you can actually see the unchanged features of the dead; through the transparent incrustation。
As soon as Fitz had gathered a few of the little flowering mosses that grew inside the coffin; we proceeded on our way; leaving poor Jacob Moorlike his great namesakealone in his glory。
Turning to the right; we scrambled up the spur of one of the mountains on the eastern side of the plain; and thence dived down among the lateral valleys that run up between them。 Although by this means we opened up quite a new system of hills; and basins; and gullies; the general scenery did not change its characteristics。 All vegetationif the black moss deserves such a nameceases when you ascend twenty feet above the level of the sea; and the sides of the mountains become nothing but steep slopes of schist; split and crumbled into an even surface by the frost。 Every step we took unfolded a fresh succession of these jagged spikes and break…neck acclivities; in an unending variety of quaint configuration。 Mountain climbing has never been a hobby of mine; so I was not tempted to play the part of Excelsior on any of these hill sides; but for those who love such exercise a fairer or a more dangerous opportunity of distinguishing themselves could not be imagined。 The supercargo or owner of the very first Dutch ship that ever came to Spitzbergen; broke his neck in attempting to climb a hill in Prince Charles's Foreland。 Barentz very nearly lost several of his men under similar circumstances; and when Scoresby succeeded in making the ascent of another hill near Horn Sound; it was owing to his having taken the precaution of marking each upward step in chalk; that he was ever able to get down again。 The prospect from the summit; the approach to which was by a ridge so narrow that he sat astride upon its edge; seems amply to have repaid the exertion; and I do not think I can give you a better idea of the general effect of Spitzbergen scenery; than by quoting his striking description of the panorama he beheld:
〃The prospect was most extensive and grand。 A fine sheltered bay was seen to the east of us; an arm of the same on the north…east; and the sea; whose glassy surface was unruffled by a breeze; formed an immense expanse on the west; the icebergs rearing their proud crests almost to the tops of mountains between which they were lodged; and defying the power of the solar beams; were scattered in various directions about the sea…coast and in the adjoining bays。 Beds of snow and ice filling extensive hollows; and giving an enamelled coat to adjoining valleys; one of which commencing at the foot of the mountain where we stood extended in a continued line towards the north; as far as the eye could reachmountain rising above mountain; until by distance they dwindled into insignificancythe whole contrasted by a cloudless canopy of deepest azure; and enlightened by the rays of a blazing sun; and the effect aided by a feeling of danger; seated as we were on the pinnacle of a rock almost surrounded by tremendous precipices;all united to constitute a picture singularly sublime。
〃Our descent we found really a very hazardous; and in some instances a painful undertaking。 Every movement was a work of deliberation。 Having by much care; and with some anxiety; made good our descent to the top of the secondary hills; we took our way down one of the steepest banks; and slid forward with great facility in a sitting posture。 Towards the foot of the hill; an expanse of snow stretched across the line of descent。 This being loose and soft; we entered upon it without fear; but on reaching the middle of it; we came to a surface of solid ice; perhaps a hundred yards across; over which we launched with astonishing velocity; but happily escaped without injury。 The men whom we left below; viewed this latter movement with astonishment and fear。〃
So universally does this strange land bristle with peaks and needles of stone; that the views we ourselv